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- Q579690 subject Q15957420.
- Q579690 subject Q16803976.
- Q579690 subject Q7867769.
- Q579690 abstract "The Mother Shipton Moth, (Callistege mi) is a moth of the Erebidae family. It was classified by Carl Alexander Clerck in 1759, and is also known under the name of Euclidia mi. In Finnish it is known as Piirtoyökkönen and in German as Scheck-Tageule. Its habitat spans over most of Europe, Siberia, the Russian Far East and Asia Minor. On the British Isles it is most common in England and Wales; less so in Scotland and Ireland. It flies by day, normally taking only short, rapid flights, and can be found in wasteland and other open habitats. The adult moth's forewing is 13 to 16 mm (0.51 to 0.63 inches) long, and the wingspan is 25 to 30 mm (0.98 to 1.18 inches). The stages of its life cycle are as follows: egg: May – September, larva: June – September, pupa: July – May, and imago: May – July. It hibernates as a pupa, and does so in a cocoon among blades of grass, or right underneath the ground. Among its foods is the nectar of the white clover and the creeping buttercup. The larva is yellowish with a dorsal line dark, finely pale in centre and with several fine wavy lines on each side. The spiracular line is broad, dark reddish brown, edged below with yellow or red.The popular, English name for this moth comes from the pattern on its forewing. This pattern resembles the iconic representation of Ursula Southeil, known as Mother Shipton – a sixteenth-century prophetess and witch. Mother Shipton is a mostly mythical character, who supposedly foretold the death of Cardinal Wolsey in 1530. Charles Hindley, a nineteenth-century bookseller, created a prophetic poem that he claimed to be by Shipley. This poem told of "Carriages without horses" and air planes, as well as predicting the end of the world in 1881.".
- Q579690 thumbnail Callistege.mi.2040.jpg?width=300.
- Q579690 wikiPageExternalLink www.faunaeur.org.
- Q579690 wikiPageExternalLink lepiwiki.pl?Euclidia_Mi.
- Q579690 wikiPageExternalLink index.html.
- Q579690 wikiPageWikiLink Q129270.
- Q579690 wikiPageWikiLink Q1412.
- Q579690 wikiPageWikiLink Q148675.
- Q579690 wikiPageWikiLink Q15957420.
- Q579690 wikiPageWikiLink Q16803976.
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- Q579690 wikiPageWikiLink Q22.
- Q579690 wikiPageWikiLink Q2261528.
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- Q579690 wikiPageWikiLink Q25.
- Q579690 wikiPageWikiLink Q259745.
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- Q579690 wikiPageWikiLink Q46.
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- Q579690 wikiPageWikiLink Q51614.
- Q579690 wikiPageWikiLink Q5428.
- Q579690 wikiPageWikiLink Q609176.
- Q579690 wikiPageWikiLink Q7867769.
- Q579690 comment "The Mother Shipton Moth, (Callistege mi) is a moth of the Erebidae family. It was classified by Carl Alexander Clerck in 1759, and is also known under the name of Euclidia mi. In Finnish it is known as Piirtoyökkönen and in German as Scheck-Tageule. Its habitat spans over most of Europe, Siberia, the Russian Far East and Asia Minor. On the British Isles it is most common in England and Wales; less so in Scotland and Ireland.".
- Q579690 label "Callistege mi".
- Q579690 depiction Callistege.mi.2040.jpg.